SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWER

Hemmings Motor News’ Mike McNessor does a deep dive on SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWER, starting in 1906!

SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWERWhen you discuss maximizing an engine’s volumetric efficiency, you are: –Boring everybody else at the party (as usual);

–Explaining to your spouse why it’s crucial that you drop a couple of grand on a supercharger for your sports car;

–Engaging in a 100-plus-year-old quest to get the most out of an internal combustion engine.

If you said all of the above, you’d be correct.

Supercharging was the earliest method used to squeeze more air into an engine than atmospheric pressure could provide naturally — a key to increasing an engine’s volumetric efficiency. Without the pumping action of the supercharger to increase the air pressure and density beyond the level of the atmosphere, the cylinders can’t fill to their maximum volume. But with the aid of a supercharger, they fill to the brim with a pressurized air/fuel charge. Thus, the cylinder displacement “grows” or is at least fully utilized. There is no doubt that SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWER! Pacers’ Tasmanian Devil Fuel Altered, with GMC/Roots blown & injected Hemi, above.

SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWERBy harnessing a device that can push more air into an engine, you can add more fuel, make more power, and, voilà, you’re off to the races — literally in the case of the pioneering Chadwick Six (more about that in a moment). Giants and founding fathers of internal combustion recognized this. Rudolf Diesel was an early adopter, as were Louis Renault and Gottlieb Daimler.

In the U.S., the earliest recorded supercharged competition car started to take shape in 1906. According to a 1976 story in Special Interest Autos, it was that year that John Thomas Nicholls, chief engineer of the Chadwick Engineering Works in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, installed a belt-driven blower on a 1,141-cubic-inch Chadwick six-cylinder engine.

This early centrifugal supercharger was reportedly 10 inches in diameter, and its impeller spun at approximately 20,000 rpm while the massive six thumped along at its 2,200 redline. In 1907, Nicholls upped the boost by running three centrifugal superchargers in series. This three-stage arrangement used impellers with 12 blades each, 10 inches in diameter, each feeding into ducts of progressively smaller diameter.

Chadwick campaigned its supercharged “Big Six” in the 1908 Vanderbilt Cup Race and, according to the October 29, 1908, edition of “The New York Times,” the vehicle “… showed exceptional speed both in practice and in the early part of the race.” Magneto trouble sidelined the Chadwick, according to “The NYT,” but they speculated that it would’ve likely challenged Locomobile for the overall. Hill climbing seemed to be the supercharged engine’s forte, and the Chadwick went on to win the 1908 Wilkes-Barre Hill Climb in Pennsylvania.

In discussing SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWER, McNessor focuses on the following types of superchargers: AXIAL-FLOW, CENTRIFUGAL, below, ROOTS, right, ROTARY SCREW, and VANE-TYPE, above. Hot rodders and drag racers are probably most familiar with Roots-type positive displacement blowers, while vintage and classic car enthusiasts can relate to centrifugal, vane-type, and even the iconic Latham axial-flow superchargers.

Continue reading SUPERCHARGING BOOSTS FREE HORSEPOWER @https://www.hemmings.com/stories/some-of-historys-greatest-performance-legacies-were-built-on-boost/

LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER

More like a positive-displacement Roots-type GMC blower than a Centrifugal McCulloch, the LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER is a unique, beautifully machined, low-profile alloy ‘turbine’ with multiple sidedraft carbs.

LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER

My first encounter with a LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER was in the early 1960s when I was working on a story about a very special E-Type Jaguar being built by Al Garz in his sophisticated restoration/speed shop in Brooklyn, NY. The Jag was powered by a Latham-supercharged small-block Corvette engine and the story was for CARS Magazine.

This was long before engine conversion kits were available for putting American V-8s in Jaguars and everything about this car – from engine detailing to the complex chassis modifications – was concours quality. The car was being built for a wealthy sports car enthusiast living in Oyster Bay, NY. Since I knew little about the forced induction system at the time, I contacted Norman Latham at his West Palm Beach, FL facility. He sent me literature, photos of Latham installations on Fords, and Briggs Cunningham’s customized and modified ’62 Pontiac Grand Prix, photo below, powered by a 421-inch engine topped by an Axial-Flow with Webers. In addition to an impressive racing history, Cunningham built his own Cadillac & Chrysler Hemi-powered sports cars in West Palm Beach before Latham started supercharger production. Latham Supercharger Kits were available for popular OHV V-8 engines as well as earlier Ford Flatheads. Depending upon engine displacement and application, Kits utilized up to four sidedraft carburetors.

LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER

Hagerty.com’s Kyle Smith tracks the history of the unique LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER in A Turbine for Your Hot Rod? Latham Says Yes.  

Supercharging has interesting roots (pun intended) in the automotive world. The idea of pressure-feeding air into an engine for a car is only a few years younger than the automobile itself. The first production examples were available on Mercedes models in 1922, and it has only become more popular since. As with many examples of technology, there were some interesting attempts at supercharging that didn’t last and ended up on the side of the long road that is automotive history. One such example is the LATHAM AXIAL-FLOW SUPERCHARGER.

Supercharging an engine relies on the crankshaft to drive a compressor that forces air into the intake, effectively increasing the volumetric efficiency of the engine by cramming more air into the cylinders than it would pull in on its own during the vacuum created by the intake stroke. The most common forms of superchargers are centrifugal, Roots, screw, and scroll. Before the market settled on the common types we’re familiar with today, there were several efforts to create the next best thing. Norman Latham of West Palm Beach, Fl, hoped his new product would be a must-have performance bolt-on.

Latham’s idea was to create an axial supercharger. This is essentially a turbine, where the supercharger housing contains “fans” that can create positive manifold pressure. Latham’s design went into production in 1956 and was sold until 1965. It was radically different than a Roots or Centrifugal supercharger, yet also combined a few of the better parts of each. A Centrifugal supercharger was a bear to tune 70 years ago because carburetors were still the most popular way of mixing the air and fuel entering an engine.

Continue reading @ https://www.hagerty.com/media/automotive-history/a-turbine-for-your-hot-rod-latham-says-yes/?hashed_email=e323c71347790f699ba35a9dc01d49ac3f938885a7df6321087c8c9b4c0dd333&dtm_em=e323c71347790f699ba35a9dc01d49ac3f938885a7df6321087c8c9b4c0dd333